## Diagnosis: Knowing Apart
The word *diagnosis* is a masterclass in Greek compounding. It combines the prefix *dia-* (through, across, apart) with the verb *gignōskein* (to know, to recognize), producing a noun that means, at its core, 'knowing apart' — the act of distinguishing one thing from another. In medicine, this became the foundational intellectual act: separating one disease from another through observation and reasoning.
### Hippocratic Origins
The concept of diagnosis is inseparable from the birth of rational medicine in ancient Greece. Hippocrates of Cos (c. 460–370 BC) and his followers broke from the tradition of attributing illness to divine punishment, instead insisting that diseases had natural causes that could be identified through careful observation of symptoms. While Hippocrates did not use the noun *diagnōsis* frequently in the surviving corpus, the verb *diagignōskein* — to distinguish, to discern — was central to his method.
The Hippocratic text *Prognostic* demonstrates the principle: the physician must observe the patient's face, posture, breathing, sleep, stools, and urine to *distinguish* the disease and predict its course. This act of diagnostic reasoning — separating the relevant from the irrelevant, the characteristic from the incidental — is precisely what the etymology encodes.
The Greek verb *gignōskein* descends from the Proto-Indo-European root *\*ǵneh₃-*, meaning 'to know' or 'to recognize'. This root is among the most prolific in the entire Indo-European family, having generated words across virtually every daughter language:
- **Greek:** *gnōsis* (knowledge), *gnōmē* (judgment), *agnostos* (unknown → agnostic) - **Latin:** *cognoscere* (to learn, to recognize → cognition, recognize, reconnaissance), *noscere* (to know → notion, noble) - **Sanskrit:** *jñā-* (to know → jñāna, prajñā) - **Old English:** *cnāwan* (to know → modern English *know*) - **Old Irish:** *gnáth* (known, familiar)
This means that *diagnosis*, *cognition*, *know*, *agnostic*, and *jñāna* are all descendants of the same prehistoric word — a single root spoken perhaps six thousand years ago on the Pontic steppe, now scattered across the vocabularies of billions.
### The Prefix *Dia-*
The prefix *dia-* carries meanings of 'through', 'across', and 'apart'. In *diagnosis*, it contributes the sense of separation — knowing *apart*, distinguishing. The same prefix appears in *dialogue* (words across, between people), *diameter* (measure across), *diaphanous* (showing through), and *diaspora* (scattering apart). Each preserves a slightly different spatial metaphor from the same Greek source.
The path from Greek *diagnōsis* to English *diagnosis* passed through Latin medical writing. Galen of Pergamon (129–216 AD), the most influential physician of antiquity, used the term extensively in his Greek medical texts, which were later translated into Latin and Arabic and formed the backbone of medieval European medical education.
English adopted *diagnosis* in the 1680s, during a period of intense scientific terminology-building. The word arrived fully formed from Neo-Latin medical literature, with its Greek morphology intact. The back-formation *diagnose* (the verb) appeared later, in the 1860s — a rare case where English created a verb from a noun that Greek had derived from a verb.
### Prognosis: The Sister Term
The companion term *prognosis* shares the same root but swaps the prefix: *pro-* (before) + *gignōskein* (to know) = 'foreknowing', the prediction of a disease's course. Together, diagnosis and prognosis represent the two temporal axes of medical reasoning: what is happening now, and what will happen next. Both were Hippocratic concepts, both preserve their Greek morphology unchanged, and both remain indispensable to clinical practice twenty-five centuries later.
### A Word That Does What It Means
*Diagnosis* is a word that performs its own definition. To diagnose is to know apart — to separate signal from noise, pattern from chaos, one condition from a hundred mimics. The etymology does not merely describe this process; it *is* this process, captured in two Greek morphemes fused together before Aristotle was born.